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  1. - Top - End - #1
    Pixie in the Playground
     
    BardGuy

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    Jul 2014
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    Default A Bit Overwhelmed--How Do I Keep This Organized?

    I'm currently homebrewing a world that my wife and I are playing. She's controlling 3 of the PCs in the party, I'm controlling 1 at the moment as an NPC (at the start, she began with 1, and eventually took over the others as she got more comfortable--we're mostly playing it as a way to get her more comfortable with 3.5 and tabletop RPGs in general as she's never played them before).

    I have an awesome hook that gives me more than enough fuel for bad guys to populate the world, twists and themes to run with (tl;dr: Ancient/Great Wyrm Red Dragon didn't want to die, was turned into a Dracolich, then decided he could deify himself if he gathered enough magical items, so he attracted an evil following to help him do this; as a result, magical items are very sought after, somewhat rare, and bands of ogres, goblins, and evil dragon shaman are raiding villages and getting more and more brash about hitting towns and small cities with their armies to loot magical items--lesser evil dragons are beholden to the dracolich and either flee their territory or deliver any magical items they gather via these ogre/goblin bands as couriers--this basically sets up infinite ways for me to create encounters, and a storyline for her to follow as she tries to figure out what's going on since at the moment she doesn't have much of an idea), but I'm kinda lost on how to put this all together.

    I've never DMed before, so that's probably part of my issue. Basically what I've been doing is trying to stay one day ahead of her when creating, but the result is I feel like anytime we're not playing I'm scrambling to keep up instead of planning ahead. I'd love to have a world fleshed out instead of a few scraps of the map designed and one or two towns/dungeons, but I'm just not sure how much detail to go into and how to best keep track of it all. I've written up a few encounters, but we took a break for a few weeks (she got Middle Earth: Shadow of Mordor and couldn't stop playing), and somehow in the process I've mixed everything up and have kinda lost track of what I had in mind for the creatures/characters I put together.

    How do you do it? How do you manage huge worlds and prepare for players to go completely against what you expect them to do (she did this in the first three nights, attacking a green dragon that I had fully intended for her to negotiate with--it was a young one and her party started at level 5, so they barely managed to kill it without being totally wiped out)?

  2. - Top - End - #2
    Ettin in the Playground
     
    Amechra's Avatar

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    Dec 2010
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    Where I live.

    Default Re: A Bit Overwhelmed--How Do I Keep This Organized?

    Never plan ahead.

    Know your world. Know your players. Know your characters.

    Know their tics, their neuroses, their likes, and fears.

    Learn to be able to answer for a character, regardless of the question; how would <BLANK> respond to <EYES>'s death?

    Do all that.

    But.

    Never.

    Ever.

    Plan.

    Ahead.
    Quote Originally Posted by segtrfyhtfgj View Post
    door is a fake exterior wall
    If you see me try to discuss the nitty-gritty of D&D 5e, kindly point me to my signature and remind me that I shouldn't. Please and thank you!

  3. - Top - End - #3
    Dwarf in the Playground
     
    dragonjek's Avatar

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    Default Re: A Bit Overwhelmed--How Do I Keep This Organized?

    If you have any intentions for where the story is going to go, don't force it upon the players. Players have a way of doing what you don't expect and tend to resent it if you try to railroad them into doing what you want them to do.

    If you want them to go to a specific place, hunt a specific enemy, or go on a specific quest, keep an open mind and work it into--with alteratiions--the direction the party is taking itself. You might need to change names, stats, reimagine your ice-king of the mountains as a mind-controlling witch of a dingy swamp, but you can still get them to go in the general direction you want them to. Rather than try to keep them from deviating from the direction you want them to go in your quest, rearrange the quest fit the decisions they've made--or set the quest aside and recycle it later with different specifics. If your players manage to come to different conclusions during a mystery or clue-hunting section of a game, consider adjusting the password or the location of the boss's secret base to what the PC's came up with, so long as it is creative and a reasonable answer from the clues you provided; you don't want to punish creative thinking and your clue might not be as obvious as you intended it to be.

    Rather than setting up steps you want the party to follow (they will always, always deviate from this), have open-ended ideas that you can change on the fly to suit what's happening in the campaign. Make personalities for important NPC's and imagine how they would speak and act in a situation, rather than writing up their dialogue beforehand. Understand your world and make a lot of general, broad notes; the specifics can get filled in when they are needed.

    Is for a more literal organization (rather than campaign organizing), split things up into folders. Group together like information--by which I don't mean "cities here, NPC's here, maps here"; rather, group cities with the maps they belong to and NPC's to the city they live in. Make it so that notes related to each other are close by (as those are generally the ones you will need the most).

    You don't need to create an entire world before play. Indeed, it is probably a better idea not to--start on the small scale, creating a town and its surrounding environment. As the adventure continues, the world will slowly flesh out as you create new towns and new NPC's until you reach a large enough scale that you can create a whole nation.
    My Homebrew:
    3 Elemental Feats
    Vgilmat, the race of little giants (with accompanying archetypes and feats)

  4. - Top - End - #4
    Troll in the Playground
     
    HalflingPirate

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    Nov 2011

    Default Re: A Bit Overwhelmed--How Do I Keep This Organized?

    Basic Story Structure

    Knowing this is the key to successful DM'ing. Imagine it as if every episode were a TV program, with 'To Be Continued" at the end of each program. (Well, they are all like that, nowadays...)

    So, at the beginning of each episode you need an introduction/recap to bring the player/s up to date: where they are, what they are doing, why they want to do it, etc. (Write this as the last thing you do after an adventure, it shouldn't take more than a paragraph or two.

    Quote Originally Posted by brian 333
    Example: Last time on Dragonball Z... err, sorry, I mean, When last we gathered there was a quest to discover why ogres have suddenly begun raiding towns, growing ever bolder. Some have surmised it is to gather magic items, others that there is a plan for total world domination afoot. However it may be, there seem to be more questions than answers.

    Meanwhile, Daisy has found herself impossibly in love with Donald, whose vows of chastity and purity make him unapproachable, and thus ever more alluring. Thraxxar has found a scroll which could unlock the mysteries of higher magics if he could ever understand it, and with its guidance he may even achieve the awesome power of Level 4 Spells.

    Now we find our intrepid band of heroes on the outskirts of Beldin, a small farmers' market town which, from the hilltop overlook, appears to have been raided by a band of ogres...
    After the introduction we need to establish the evening's goal, as a part of the story. This allows the players the opportunity to investigate and discover what those goals should be, (or fall for a red herring and miss the goal completely.)

    Quote Originally Posted by brian 333
    The PC's enter the sacked town as the townsfolk clean up and prepare the funerals for their many dead, or care for the injured and traumatized victims of the raid. Affter meeting with the leaders they learn there is little enough in the way of food and supplies left in the town, the ogres having ransacked it, and that there are a couple of ogre prisoners the townsfolk plan to kill in revenge for their part in the battle.
    Once the goal is established we need a buildup of pressure on the party, and they are forced to act lest the situation run out of their control. This could be combat sequences, but it could as well be social stress.

    Quote Originally Posted by brian 333
    Thrxxar and Daisy converse about Daisy's would-be relationship, and Thraxxar makes it plain that Daisy will have to choose between forcing Donald to break his vows or forcing him to break her heart. Will she choose either of these options, or allow her love to go unrequited?
    Donald meanwhile interrogates the ogre captives, who are tough nuts to crack. How close to breaking his paladin vows must he go before the ogres finally reveal there is a hidden camp nearby that is used to spy on the town?
    Then there is a climax: the ultimate challenge for the evening. This is the make-or-break moment for the party. Everything they have done so far leads to this moment, and its outcome determines the course of the next adventurer in the series.

    Quote Originally Posted by brian 333
    The band enters the woods and makes an attack on the spy-camp. It is heavily guarded, but not occupied by a true army. However, what it lacks in numbers it makes up for in quality. The spymasters and their slaves are tough opponents who challenge the party to their very limits! Removing these scum from the enemy's army will greatly weaken the enemy, but failure here could mean whatever survivors of the party make it back to civilization must recruit new companions if they wish to continue their quest, or abandon the quest altogether.
    Finally, there is the ending, or denoument. This allows the party to learn the lessons of the event, split the spoils, and close up any loose strands that may be lying about, (or expose any hooks for the next installment.)

    Quote Originally Posted by brian 333
    Donald stands triumphant in the midst of the defeated ogre band. In his hand he holds a map, torn, but still legible, showing the locations of six other scouting camps, two of them outside towns which have yet to be sacked by the ogres. As he stands there he sees Daisy approaching, and cringes, knowing the effect he has had upon her, yet unable to find a way to resolve the situation. To his surprise, Daisy confesses her feelings, then says that her claims are selfish, that to remove Donald from his place at the head of the party at this time would be a disaster for them personally and for humanity as a whole. She will follow him as his soldier, and if after all this is over they both survive, will think about pursuing their relationship then.

    Thraxxar screams with jubilation: he finally understands a critical piece of the formula and now understands the key to unlocking Fourth Level Spells! As he cavorts in joy the rest of the party gather what remains of the ogre's stolen wealth.
    So,
    I Recap
    II Establish Goals
    III Buildup
    IV Climax
    V Conclusion

    Basic Story Structure.

    Now you can have a little fun with it. The old time serials used to end right in the middle of the Climax and have the conclusion concurrent with the next week's Goals. They called this a Cliffhanger, supposedly because just as the hero was hanging from a cliff the narrator would break in with, "Will he make it? Tune in next week for another exciting episode!" The Adam West Batman series did this every single episode, in a conscious parody of the technique.

    This is also the structure of an overall campaign. You may have many episodes in the Establish Goals section, a few in the Buildup section, and two or three Climax episodes, but within each episode there should be a stand-alone story. This gives the players a feeling that they accomplished something, and leaves them wanting to come back for more.

    The structure helps you as a DM by defining for you what parts you must focus on as you build the night's adventurers too. Others have said to avoid planning ahead. I will modify that by saying, plan ahead, but not for what your players will do: plan for what your villains will do in each episode, and if the party hares off in the wrong direction you will know what the party can expect next week. The missing map, for example, that they should have found, will now be in the hands of the enemy who will use it. Next week's episode will be about catching up before the enemy wins the race!

  5. - Top - End - #5
    Bugbear in the Playground
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    Nov 2010
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    Vancouver BC Canada
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    Default Re: A Bit Overwhelmed--How Do I Keep This Organized?

    May be a bit late to start learning 3.5 as 5e is right around the corner. Apparently it's pretty good.

    This is good GMing advice, if you've got a few hundred hours to digest it all:
    http://www.feartheboot.com/ftb/index...egory/podcasts

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